GAMES
RANKINGS
VYPE Awards 2021: Williams, Collins, Martin headline Hall of Fame Class
It is awards season here at VYPE!
We welcome you to the Countdown to the 2021 VYPE Awards presented by Houston Methodist Orthopedics & Sports Medicine. Over the next two weeks, we will be unveiling the finalists for the player of the year awards. Team and Coach of the Year awards will be announced LIVE during the Fourth Annual VYPE Awards.
The winners will be honored in a one-hour virtual show on Sunday, June 27 at 6 p.m. on VYPE Houston's website, Twitter account and on the VYPE Texas Facebook page and YouTube Channel! It will be an event to get dressed up for and to tune in to as it will be an evening full of special moments!
Let us get it started! Here are the VYPE Hall of Fame!
Trey Williams, Dekaney Football

Dekaney's Trey Williams was one of the most dominant backs in the city in decades.
As a sophomore, he rushed for 1,930 yards, 18 touchdowns, and was named District 13-5A Newcomer of the Year. As a junior, he had 251 carries for 2,290 yards and 20 touchdowns, receiving District 13-5A MVP and Class 5A second-team All-State honors. As a senior, he had 447 carries for 3,890 yards, 48 touchdowns, 10 kickoff returns for 346 yards and 2 touchdowns, to go along with 6 punt returns for 113 yards and one touchdown.
He helped lead Dekaney High School to its first ever state championship game, where the Wildcats beat previously undefeated Cibolo Steele High School 34–14 to win the championship.
The 5-Star All-American signed with Texas A&M and now plays in the CFL.
Chloe Collins, Cypress Woods Volleyball

By Diana Porter
Chloe Collins was a beast at Cy Woods. She earned 2012 Under Armour High School All-America first team honors and was named the District 17-5A most valuable player in her 2011 junior season, leading Cypress Woods to a 41-6 record ... tallied 179 kills, 206 digs, 30 aces and 470 assists for the Wildcats. As a sophomore in 2010, she helped Cypress Woods to a 45-3 record and the Region III championship as the team reached the state 5A semifinals.
Collins continued her volleyball career at the University of Texas at Austin (2013-12016) where she helped the Longhorns to 3 Big 12 Championships and 4 NCAA Final Fours. Throughout her career at Texas, Collins was a 2x AVCA All-American and earned Big 12 Conference First Team honors. After graduating with a BA in Communication Studies, Collins went off to play her first professional season in Spain and Finland.
Bralon Addison, Hightower Football

Mr. Mo' City.
Hightower Hurricane Bralon Addison led his team to the state title game against Southlake Carroll as a senior in 2011. He threw for 2,158 passing yards and 22 passing scores, and added 1,625 rushing yards and 20 rushing touchdowns as a senior. As a junior, he passed for 1,858 yards with 28 touchdowns and rushed for 1,068 yards and 15 touchdowns.
The four-star recruit had a great career at Oregon and plays in the CFL. He also ran track and basketball while at Hightower.
Corbin Martin, Cy Ranch Baseball

By Diana Porter
Corbin Martin did a little bit of everything at Cypress Ranch High School.
He played some football but his future was baseball. He hit a home run in the Mustangs' state title win his sophomore season and received All-State and District MVP honors his junior and senior seasons.. Martin was an Under Armour All-American as senior going 8-0 on the mound. He had a 12-1 record with a 0.67 ERA and batted .357 with four home runs his junior season and posted an 11-0 record with a 1.28 ERA and 62 strikeouts as a sophomore.
He played his college ball at Texas A&M and was selected in the second round of the 2017 MLB Draft by the Houston Astros.
Kristen Davenport, Deer Park Softball

By Jerry Baker
Sure, Deer Park won a state title this season, but Kristen Davenport dominated for the Deer like no other back in 2012.
She led Deer Park to a 5A State Championship in 2012, received All-District accolades three times and was the Player of the Game in both the state semifinal and state championship games. Not shocking that she was the State Tournament MVP.
Davenport was named the TWSA Class 5A Player of the Year and chosen as a TWSA Class 5A First-Team All-State Pitcher her senior year.
Houston Methodist Orthopedics & Sports Medicine is Houston's leading provider of orthopedic services, from sports medicine to joint replacement. Houston Methodist offers comprehensive diagnostic, treatment and rehabilitative services with a high standard of excellence for elite athletes, active adults and student athletes. Houston Methodist serves as the official health care provider for the Houston Texans, Houston Astros, Rice Athletics, Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo™, Houston Ballet, Houston Symphony and Houston Grand Opera.
Jaydon Blue off to the 40 Acres
COLUMN: Jaydon Blue missing "most authentic football he will ever play"
The minute I saw the Tweet that Klein Cain RB and national recruit Jaydon Blue was forgoing his senior year of high school football, I just had to laugh. But it's really not a laughing matter.
HUGE BREAKING NEWS!! @KLEINCAINFB RB @JaydonBlue has announced that he will forego his senior season. #txhsfb https://t.co/ATz9cr0Pq5
— VYPE Houston (@vypehouston) May 20, 2021
Is this what we've come to? Really? Opting out of college football is whack, but high school football? I've seen kids check out of their senior year because they have dozens of offers, but not opt-out altogether.
Is this a trend or just an anomaly? Is this the future of nationally-ranked football recruits? We know this is the standard in basketball as athletes bounce from their high schools and drift to Prep Schools across the country.
But has the Texas Longhorn commit let the genie out of the bottle that we will never get back in?
...
I first heard of Jaydon Blue when he was graduating from middle school… middle school! Not through social media, not from a recruiting service, not from a personal trainer, not from a 7-on-7 team… but from his high school coach… his future high school coach.
"The kid is going to be special," everyone said. And he is talented.
At 6-foot, 205-pounds, Blue was the District Offensive MVP last season. He's really good and he's a Top 10 player in the country. He knows it, his family knows it, his people know it.
Look, when you are a coveted national recruit there are so many trappings. So many influences. You have dollar signs in your eyes. Big NFL dreams. I've been doing this for over two decades, I've seen this 100 times.
However, those who are kept grounded and humbled by their coaches and friends, usually succeed on the field and in life.
But this onion has so many layers and gory details that I won't go into, It's a tough pill to swallow, but what I love about high school coaches is their "next man up mentality."
High school coaches have 350 kids in their program and no one person is bigger than the program, right? One thing about football coaches, they are consistent as hell. They just keep moving.
See North Shore, coach Jon Kay, Zach Evans, and the 2019 State Championship game. Google it.
What's the biggest shame about this? Blue's "350 brothers", who he "went to war with" at practice and on the playing field found out like we all did… on social media. Friends he played with before all of this crap ever mattered – from Little League to junior high to coming up on varsity.
Here's the point. High school is a special time, it's magical. It's friendships and bonds that last longer than the money. This chapter is nearly over, why not finish it out?
Don't just take it from me. Take it from someone who has been through it.
...

In 2012, Dekaney running back Trey Williams was Jaydon Blue before Jaydon Blue. Williams was the No. 2 overall All-Purpose Back in the country. Everyone wanted him. He had all the same trappings.
Dekaney was a new school looking for a "face of the program". The school was just five years old but had a prodigy.
The parallels are interesting. Klein Cain is also entering year five and Blue was the Big Man on Campus. Nationally, not just locally.
Williams and the Wildcats came out of nowhere to win a STATE TITLE in 2011 – Williams legacy was cemented forever.
"High school football is the most genuine football you are ever going to play," Williams said in a phone interview with VYPE. "You are playing for the love of the game with your friends. Don't get ahead of yourself and enjoy it.
"If I would have done such a thing, I would have regretted it. Not only would I be letting my teammates down, but my coaches down, my community down. I wanted to build something at Dekaney. Something that had never been done. I wanted to build a legacy.
"Here's the thing, there is going to come a time where he's going to have to come back to the community. What about those guys you left in high school? You are going to leave and do your own thing. That's not what football is about."
Williams finished with over 8,000 yards and 86 TDs. He was an All-American on every level and was offered by everyone in the country. He even played baseball. He had a successful career at Texas A&M before turning pro, where he has played for seven NFL teams. Now, he plays in the Canadian Football League.
"Take it from me, when you leave high school, it's nothing but business. It's a business and they treat you like that starting in college," Williams said. "You are going to get your feelings hurt.
"I could have never sacrificed my senior year. All the things my teammates and I went through, the highs and lows. Those were the greatest moments of my football career. It was better than making the NFL.
"That sticks with you. Trust me, coaches or GMs see you leaving your team now, they are going to think that someday you will leave them too."
Some might argue, didn't Trey Williams leave Texas A&M early?
"Yes, I skipped my senior year of college but I was playing in the SEC," he said. "There was NFL talent on every down I was playing. I was grown. I was in college for three years and ready to get off that porch and get to real work. I was a man by that time and able to make my own decisions based on what I knew. But in high school?"
"You've got to know what you are getting into. You think you are immortal, but you can quickly find out that you're not such a big guy after all. It happens that quickly and people who don't know what it's really like, don't know what it's really like out there. Everyone thinks they are going to play in the league for a long time. It's just not set up like that.
"If I could get in an athletes' ear, I would tell them to enjoy football now. This decision is bigger than football."
...
One of the best in the business recently told me, "we will never know the impact that COVID had on high school athletes. They virtually missed one of the most formative years of their lives without their coaches, their teammates, and the life lessons of football that go with it."
With that, the grip of the Texas high school coaches has loosened even more. That's too bad and here's why. Who SHOULD a big-time recruit trust the most? Their high school coach. The coach wants to win, right? The wins are great, but the losses are worse. They push and pull and try and get the most out of their players.
But they DON'T coach for the money. Coaches are simply not trying to cash in on their players, especially at the high school level.
They are in the business of HELPING kids, teaching life lessons, and giving good advice. If any parent or outsider tries to say otherwise… they are FLAT wrong. That's their currency. Call it KidCoin.
…
To tie a bow in it, Jaydon Blue's decision to forego his senior year of high school has become a national story. What's next?
Is Jaydon Blue a victim of circumstance? Nahhhh.
But what is it? COVID 19? Not wanting to get injured? Is it bad advice? Focusing on academics? Like what is it, really? Yes, it is his decision, but is it a good decision?
The question is, will he be one of the first to start this trend, or is this just a one-off?
I hope it's the latter.
Look, I don't have a vested interest in kids playing for their high schools. But I have kids of my own, and here's what I know is true. Having mentors like high school coaches; having an opportunity to grow in a locker room environment where different races and socio-economic classes work together for a common goal; learning accountability, and being a part of something bigger than yourself is a great thing. It's called LIFE-LESSONS.
Should I go on?
I hope the best for Jaydon Blue and his people. But, I hope he doesn't look back 20 years from now and say, "I wish I would have played with my guys".
Maybe, maybe not.
VYPE reached out to Jaydon Blue for comments, but didn't hear back.


























